A particle display device having a monolayer of a bistable polarizable molecule on either side of a gap filled with a liquid containing suspended particles. The monolayers and the liquid filled gap are disposed between patterned electrodes that are used to apply an electric field across the layers of the gap, thus influencing the orientation or the distribution of the suspended particles. The optical transmission or reflectance of the gap is dependent upon the applied electric field. The polarizable monolayers respond to the applied electric field by assuming one of two stable polarized states. The field provided by the dipoles of the molecules in the monolayer remains after the external field is removed, thereby sustaining the electric field influence on the suspended particles of the display device.
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16. A display device comprising:
a first substrate having a surface partially covered with a first electrically conductive film, wherein a portion of said first electrically conductive film is coated with a first bistable molecular monolayer; a second substrate having a surface partially covered with a second electrically conductive film, wherein a portion of said second electrically conductive film is coated with a second bistable molecular monolayer, wherein said first substrate is disposed opposite and substantially parallel to said second substrate, such that a gap is formed between said first bistable molecular monolayer and said second bistable molecular monolayer; a liquid disposed in said gap, said liquid containing suspended particles responsive to an electric field.
1. A display device comprising:
a first transparent substrate comprising a surface partially covered with a first transparent electrically conductive film, having a portion coated with a first bistable molecular monolayer; a second transparent substrate comprising a surface partially covered with a second transparent electrically conductive film, having a portion coated with a second bistable molecular monolayer, wherein said first transparent substrate is disposed opposite and substantially parallel to said second transparent substrate, such that a gap is formed between said first bistable molecular monolayer and said second bistable molecular monolayer; a liquid disposed in said gap, comprising suspended particles responsive to an electric field, such that the optical transmission of said display device is dependent upon the electrical polarization of said first and second bistable molecular monolayers.
9. A display device comprising:
a first transparent substrate having a surface partially covered with a transparent first electrically conductive film, wherein a portion of said first electrically conductive film is coated with a first bistable molecular monolayer; a second substrate having a surface partially covered with a second electrically conductive film, wherein a portion of said second electrically conductive film is coated with a second bistable molecular monolayer, wherein said first substrate is disposed opposite and substantially parallel to said second substrate, such that a gap is formed between said first bistable molecular monolayer and said second bistable molecular monolayer; a liquid disposed in said gap, said liquid containing suspended particles responsive to an electric field, such that the optical reflectance of said display device is dependent upon the polarization of said first and second bistable molecular monolayers.
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1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to display devices. In particular, the invention relates to a structure for maintaining the state of a display device using an induced electric field.
2. Related Art
Flat-Panel Displays (FPDs), which are commonly used in laptop computers and other portable applications require low power consumption and compact size, in addition to good visual display characteristics. One class of technology used for FPDs involves the manipulation of particles that are suspended in a liquid medium to alter the reflective and transmissive properties of the medium.
There are two general types of particle displays, the first is often referred to as a suspended particle display (SPD). In SPDs the orientation of the particles is selectively controlled to produce the optical contrast required for a display. In an electrophoretic image display (EPID) the distribution of a particle population is selectively controlled in order to produce the optical contrast required for a display. In both cases an electric field is used to control the particles. It should be noted that particles in both display types are suspended in a liquid medium, and in one case the response to the electric field is with respect to orientation, and in the other with respect to distribution.
SPDs are attractive due to their wide viewing angle, high optical transmission and ease of fabrication. With SPDs, light valve action is obtained when sub-micron sized particles with an asymmetric, plate-like shape align with an externally-applied electric field, and thus permit light to pass through (the "light" state). This alignment occurs because the external field induces a dipole moment in the molecules of the particles. In the absence of the external field, the particles orient randomly due to brownian motion, and consequently block light (the "dark" state).
For example, crystals of iodoquinine sulfate or related compounds may be dispersed in an organic liquid, and since the crystals are dichroic, there is a large difference between the absorption in the unaligned state in comparison to the aligned state. In the absence of an applied field, the random orientation produces a bluish-black appearance, and in the aligned state there is very little absorption and good contrast can be obtained with a white background. A significant disadvantage of SPDs is that the light areas of the display must be continuously energized with the external electric field to maintain the display, thus consuming energy even when the image on the display is static. SPDs also typically lack a clear voltage threshold, and require active-matrix addressing for high resolution.
In EPIDs, the particles used in the display are electrically charged and may either have a color that contrasts with the liquid used to suspend them, for example white particles in a dark blue dye, or may be divided into particles of two contrasting colors with opposite charge. The particles migrate under the influence of an applied electric field to the front or back of the display, producing a light or dark region when viewed from the front. The EPID operates by reflection and absorption as opposed to transmission. Although EPIDs have inherent memory, there is no voltage threshold, making multiplexed displays difficult.
Thus, the need exists for a particle display that is able to retain a displayed image without an applied external field. There is also a need for a particle display that has a voltage threshold that enables multiplexing.
A particle display device having a monolayer of a bistable polarizable molecule on either or both sides of a gap filled with a liquid containing suspended particles is disclosed. The monolayers and the liquid filled gap are disposed between patterned electrodes that are used to apply an electric field across the layers of the gap, thus influencing the orientation or the distribution of the suspended particles. The optical transmission or reflectance of the gap is dependent upon the applied electric field. The polarizable monolayers respond to the applied electric field by assuming one of two stable polarized states. The field provided by the dipoles of the molecules in the monolayer remains after the external field is removed, thereby sustaining the electric field influence on the suspended particles of the display device.
In one embodiment of the present invention, an SPD having plate-like or tabular particles suspended in a liquid filled gap between two transparent substrates has a monolayer of a bistable polarizable molecule applied to the surface of each of the substrates. The bistable polarizable molecule has two stable states separated by an electric field threshold, with one state having a higher electric dipole moment than the other, or a reversed dipole. When an external field of sufficient strength is applied across the substrates, the dipoles on opposite sides of the gap are in opposite complementary states and provide an internal field for the device that remains after the external field is removed.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention:
In the following detailed description of the present invention, a particle display device using bistable molecular monolayers, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be obvious to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances well known processes, procedures, components, and structures have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the present invention.
a) The molecule must have at least two segments.
b) All segments must have π- and/or p-electrons.
c) The molecule can be either symmetrical or asymmetrical with a donor group on one side and an acceptor group on another side.
d) At least two segments of the molecule have some functional groups that will help to stabilize both states of folding and stretching through intra- or inter-molecular forces such as hydrogen bonding, Van der Waals forces, coulomb attraction or metal complex.
e) The folding or stretching states of the molecule must be e-field addressable.
f) At least in one state (presumably on a fully stretched-out state), the π- and/or p-electrons of the molecule will be well delocalized, and the π- and/or p-electrons of the molecule will be localized or only partially delocalized in other state(s).
In
When in the folded configuration 11 of
For particle display devices, the front substrate is transparent for both transmissive and reflective devices, and the conductive film may be either a transparent conductive oxide (e.g. doped indium or tin oxide or ruthenium oxide), or a thin metal film. For thin metal films, a stable metal such as gold or a platinum group metal is preferred. Since the metal film must be very thin to provide transparency, chemical stability is desirable.
The fabrication of a molecular monolayer on a gold film can be accomplished by using a molecule having thiol functional group (S--H) on one end. The monolayer can be assembled from solution or by vapor deposition. The process may be performed in a two step sequence in which the species are first physisorbed on the substrate and then mildly heated to produce the sulfur-gold bond, with the chemisorbed species being more tightly bound than the physisorbed species. Alkanethiols, having a linear carbon chain terminated with a thiol group may serve as the binding end of a bistable molecule, with functional groups being added to binding group to provide the required electronic properties for the molecule as a whole.
For a reflective particle display such as an EPID, transparency is not required for the back substrate, and a thicker metal film may be used. The ability to use a thicker film provides more flexibility in the selection of the metal used and the species used to bond to the metal film.
As shown in
The suspended particles 60 and the liquid medium 63 have contrasting colors, for example, the particles 60 may be white and the liquid medium 63 a dark blue. In
Since the two groups of particles 70A and 70B have opposite charge, they will migrate to opposite substrates in the presence of an applied electric field. Depending upon the field orientation in a given region of the display, one group or the other will be resident on the surface of the substrate being viewed and the other will be obscured. The liquid medium 73 may be either transparent or opaque.
Since the field produced by the bistable molecular monolayers is a DC field, it is important that the particles be prevented from agglomerating or "plating out" in response to the field. In addition to the monolayers that are tailored for the substrate surfaces, monolayers or partial layers of molecules designed to provide steric hindrance may be used on the particle surfaces to prevent irreversible binding of the particles to the bistable molecular monolayers, or to each other. The charge associated with the particles used in an EPID will help prevent agglomeration in an EPI; however, the particles in a SPD are not typically charged, and may require the assistance of steric hindrance to prevent Van der Waals forces from becoming strong enough to resist the electrostatic forces that enable operation of the display device.
In order to serve as a standoff, the molecule providing steric hindrance must be able to inhibit close approach between particles and the bistable molecular monolayer so that the radius of approach does not become small enough to allow Van der Waals forces to dominate.
The preferred embodiment of the present invention, a particle display device using bistable molecular monolayers, is thus described. While the present invention has been described in particular embodiments, it should be appreciated that the present invention should not be construed as limited by such embodiments, but rather construed according to the below claims.
Hubby, Jr., Laurence M., Zhang, Sean
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